Throne of a Thousand Years: Chronicles as Told by Erik, Son of Riste, Commemorating Sweden's Monarchy from 995-96 to 1995-1996 | |
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Front of the dust cover of Throne of a Thousand Years from 1996. |
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Author(s) | Jacob Truedson Demitz |
Country | Sweden and United States |
Language | English |
Subject(s) | Swedish history |
Publisher | Ristesson Ent |
Publication date | December 19 1996 |
Pages | 332 |
ISBN | 978-91-630-5030-5 |
OCLC Number | 36647578 |
LC Classification | DL644.1 .D46 1996 |
Throne of a Thousand Years is a non-fiction book, written by Jacob Truedson Demitz and published in 1996, and is the first English-language historical account of the kings and queens of Sweden.[1][2]
It details their personal histories, the impact of their reigns on Scandinavian history, and the political implications of disclosed dynastic ties in Europe.
Sponsored mainly by Ericsson, ABB and the Swedish Postal Service, the account was published by Ristesson Ent in Ludvika and Los Angeles. A fictional chronicler called Erik, Son of Riste relates the factual story, which is followed by fact boxes about each of the 66 monarchs covered and a number of ancestry charts. Illustrations (if not otherwise noted in the book) are portrait drawings by the author made from the 1960s to the 1990s,[3] and 3 differently sorted lists of persons are included as well as an appended text rendition in Swedish.
There is a nine-page list of bibliography on pages 181-189.
Throne of a Thousand Years was particularly praised by Dala-Demokraten for its English-language name forms, exonyms for pre-20th-century Swedish royalty, and a "refreshing" lack of nationalism,[4] and by Nya Ludvika Tidning for its general interest and for easy access to hard-to-find facts.[2]